Black Sabbath
吉他谱: 425 粉丝: 90

小简介
    
诞生于1969年伯明翰的乐队是由贝司手GEEZER BUTLER,吉他手TONY IOMMI,鼓手BILL WARD,歌手Ozzy Osbourne组成。1969年乐队把原名“Earth”改成了“BLACK SABBATH”他们以使用纯正音色,极度简化的音乐和魔术般的联想著称。1970年推出了第一张同名专辑《BLACK SABBATH》。他们的第二张专辑《PARANOID》中的同名专辑也取得了一次瞬间的轰动。乐队的演出结合了核战争与死亡的主题,还显示了毒品,青年反叛的厄运和毁灭与队的感染力是建立在于青年观众一对一的确定的基础上。但几乎没有电台乐于给他们播放唱片,其中最著名的就是《MASTERS OF REALITY》和《SABBATH BLOODY SABBATH》他们的巡演也几乎场场爆满。在八十年代BLACK SABBATH的人员一直在处于不断的变化中,只有IOMMO一人一直留在乐队中。到了九十年代BLACK SABBATH已渐渐的被人遗忘,但他们早期的唱片仍能给新一代的乐队和听众带来灵感。

大事记

1969年——1979年初:
Ozzy Osbourne为SABBATH的主唱,不过从其网站了解到实际上1977年10月到78年1月这一段时期OZZY因为个人问题离开了乐队,这一段时间内Never Say Die专集的准备暂由前FLEETWOOD MAC乐队的成员Dave Walker代替,可惜的是Dave在时仅参加过1978年1月BBC Midlands的“Look Here!”节目,并没有留下太多痕迹。78年OZZY返回乐队录制这张Never Say Die但很可惜由于太多私人的原因,这张专集中已经少有OZZY的声音,大多数都是由鼓手Bill Ward演唱。这张专集拖延了很长时间才完成,79年初在Dio来之前的一些日子里,OZZY终被“解雇”了。
1979年3月——1982年10月:
Ronnie James Dio为SABBATH的主唱,乐队的风格多少因为主唱的原因发生了改变,Dio的风格与OZZY不同,但从某种角度上演绎了另外一支优秀的SABBATH乐队,依旧有众多的乐迷支持这SABBATH。在此期间乐队是非也是连绵不断,从一开始OZZY的离开,到贝司手的往返,前QUARTZ乐队的Geoff Nicholls从贝司到键盘的更换,鼓手Bill暂时离去,还有其中一些说不清的问题。但是乐队在这期间还是有新作品发行,Dio在期间曾发行过"Heaven and Hell","Mob Rules","Live Evil"都仍旧属于经典的专集。
1982年——1997年3月:
在这漫长的十五年里SABBATH乐队的成员聚聚散散,重金属乐队的猛烈增长,各种金属流派的出现,使大多数的重金属乐迷渐渐将注意力转移到新的乐队,新的音乐风格中去,但无论任何人提起SABBATH的时候都会以其前几张专集赞叹崇拜不已,已经很少有人会关心SABBATH的后来,在这些年中他们的变化与成长。
在这漫长的十年里乐队不仅仅是风格的变化,最重要的是川流不息的成员更换,MOLD一直以为SABBATH乐队只有三位主唱,就是OZZY、Bio和Martin但直到浏览了他们的网站之后,才发现DEEP PURPLE的Ian Gillan曾在Born Again中担任主唱,这张专集从血腥奸邪恐怖的婴儿封面到作品的阴邪气质都证明了其可听性。84年的春天Ian Gillan离开了SABBATH返回自己的世界重组DEEP PURPLE,SABBATH随即又招来了其他人,从84年到87年的3月左右,乐队简直可以说是乱七八糟,乐手因为各种原因离开,乐队进入冷冻时期,即使是老IOMMI的召唤也看似无济于事,即使在这期间发行过几张专集,MOLD也没有听过,真有被人将要淡忘的迹象。87年的3月在仍旧没有贝司手的情况下,Tony Martin成为乐队的新主唱,基本上到OZZY的重返期间,均由Martin担任这个位置,这期间乐队的风格几乎曾游走型,你几乎无法再寻找出色的专集出来,乐队成员如果没有达成默契,即使是IOMMI也无能为力。
97年3月——:
OZZY又一次回到乐队中,乐队又恢复了往昔的阵容,98年发行了一张象征重组的专集"Reunion"中又一次品味了SABBATH的经典之作。时至今日,SABBATH是否仍旧存在已经显得不是那么重要了,他们留给众人的已经被铭记于心,而他们的历程不管是光彩夺目还是暗淡无光都会因为他们持久的毅力而令每一个人敬佩不已。
在SABBATH这支乐队里,最令MOLD欣赏的人莫过于Tony Iommi,热爱这种音乐的真实体现,就是用你的心去倾听,用你的一生去投入,Iommi从未停止过脚步,这种音乐就是他的生命,也始终属于他。
最后MOLD将SABBATH网站一个关于乐队乐手更换的数目列于此你便知晓这三十年的变化是如何纷乱与频繁的了。
领衔吉他:Tony Iommi,他是乐队的核心,从未更换过,即使是69年的短暂出行也根本微不足道。

Black Sabbath has been so influential in the development of heavy metal rock music as to be a defining force in the style. The group took the blues-rock sound of late '60s acts like Cream, Blue Cheer, and Vanilla Fudge to its logical conclusion, slowing the tempo, accentuating the bass, and emphasizing screaming guitar solos and howled vocals full of lyrics expressing mental anguish and macabre fantasies. If their predecessors clearly came out of an electrified blues tradition, Black Sabbath took that tradition in a new direction, and in so doing helped give birth to a musical style that continued to attract millions of fans decades later.

The group was formed by four teenage friends from Aston, near Birmingham, England: Anthony "Tony" Iommi (b. Feb 19, 1948), guitar; William "Bill" Ward (b. May 5, 1948), drums; John "Ozzy" Osbourne (b. Dec 3, 1948), vocals; and Terence "Geezer" Butler (b. Jul 17, 1949), bass. They originally called their jazz-blues band Polka Tulk, later renaming themselves Earth, and they played extensively in Europe. In early 1969, they decided to change their name again when they found that they were being mistaken for another group called Earth. Butler had written a song that took its title from a novel by occult writer Dennis Wheatley, Black Sabbath, and the group adopted it as their name as well. As they attracted attention for their live performances, record labels showed interest, and they were signed to Phillips Records in 1969. In January 1970, the Phillips subsidiary Fontana released their debut single, "Evil Woman (Don't Play Your Games With Me)," a cover of a song that had just become a U.S. hit for Crow; it did not chart. The following month, a different Phillips subsidiary, Vertigo, released Black Sabbath's self-titled debut album, which reached the U.K. Top Ten. Though it was a less immediate success in the U.S. — where the band's recordings were licensed to Warner Bros. Records and appeared in May 1970 — the LP broke into the American charts in August, reaching the Top 40, remaining in the charts over a year, and selling a million copies.

Appearing at the start of the '70s, Black Sabbath embodied the Balkanization of popular music that followed the relatively homogenous second half of the 1960s. As exemplified by its most popular act, the Beatles, the 1960s suggested that many different aspects of popular music could be integrated into an eclectic style with a broad appeal. The Beatles were as likely to perform an acoustic ballad as a hard rocker or R&B-influenced tune. At the start of the 1970s, however, those styles began to become more discrete for new artists, with soft rockers like James Taylor and the Carpenters emerging to play only ballad material, and hard rockers like Led Zeppelin and Grand Funk Railroad taking a radically different course, while R&B music turned increasingly militant. The first wave of rock critics, which had come into existence with the Beatles, was dismayed with this development, and the new acts tended to be poorly reviewed despite their popularity. Black Sabbath, which took an even more extreme tack than the still blues- and folk-based Led Zeppelin, was lambasted by critics (and though they eventually made their peace with Zeppelin, they never did with Sabbath). But the band had discovered a new audience eager for its uncompromising approach.

Black Sabbath quickly followed its debut album with a second album, Paranoid, in September 1970. The title track, released as a single in advance of the LP, hit the Top Five in the U.K., and the album went to number one there. In the U.S., where the first album had just begun to sell, Paranoid was held up for release until January 1971, again preceded by the title track, which made the singles charts in November; the album broke into the Top Ten in March 1971 and remained in the charts over a year, eventually selling over four million copies, by far the band's best-selling effort. (Its sales were stimulated by the belated release of one of its tracks, "Iron Man," as a U.S. single in early 1972; the 45 got almost halfway up the charts, the band's best showing for an American single.)

Master of Reality, the third album, followed in August 1971, reaching the Top Ten on both sides of the Atlantic and selling over a million copies. Black Sabbath, Vol. 4 (September 1972) was another Top Ten million-seller. For Sabbath Bloody Sabbath (November 1973), the band brought in Yes keyboard player Rick Wakeman on one track, signaling a slight change in musical direction; it was Black Sabbath's fifth straight Top Ten hit and million-seller. In 1974, the group went through managerial disputes that idled them for an extended period. When they returned to action in July 1975 with their sixth album, Sabotage, they were welcomed back at home, but in the U.S. the musical climate had changed, making things more difficult for an album-oriented band with a heavy style, and though the LP reached the Top 20, it did not match previous sales levels. Black Sabbath's record labels quickly responded with a million-selling double-LP compilation, We Sold Our Soul for Rock 'n' Roll (December 1975), and the band contemplated a more pronounced change of musical style. This brought about disagreement, with guitarist Iommi wanting to add elements to the sound, including horns, and singer Osbourne resisting any variation in the formula. Technical Ecstasy (October 1976), which adopted some of Iommi's innovations, was another good — but not great — seller, and Osbourne's frustration eventually led to his quitting the band in November 1977. He was replaced for some live dates by former Savoy Brown singer Dave Walker, then returned in January 1978. Black Sabbath recorded its eighth album, Never Say Die! (September 1978), the title track becoming a U.K. Top 40 hit before the LP's release and "Hard Road" making the Top 40 afterwards. But the singles did not improve the album's commercial success, which was again modest, and Osbourne left Black Sabbath for a solo career, replaced in June 1979 by former Rainbow singer Ronnie James Dio (b. June 10, 1949). (Also during this period, keyboardist Geoff Nichols became a regular part of the band's performing and recording efforts, though he was not officially considered a band member until later.)

The new lineup took its time getting into the recording studio, not releasing its first effort until April 1980 with Heaven and Hell. The result was a commercial resurgence. In the U.S., the album was a million-seller; in Britain, it was a Top Ten hit that threw off two chart singles, "Neon Knights" and "Die Young." (At the same time, the band's former British record label issued a five-year old concert album, Black Sabbath Live at Last, that was quickly withdrawn, though not before making the U.K. Top Five, and reissued "Paranoid" as a single, getting it into the Top 20.) Meanwhile, drummer Bill Ward left Black Sabbath due to ill health and was replaced by Vinnie Appice. The lineup of Iommi, Butler, Dio, and Appice then recorded Mob Rules (November 1981), which was almost as successful as its predecessor: In the U.S., it went gold, and in the U.K. it reached the Top 20 and spawned two chart singles, the title track and "Turn up the Night." Next on the schedule was a concert album, but Iommi and Dio clashed over the mixing of it, and by the time Live Evil appeared in January 1983, Dio had left Black Sabbath, taking Appice with him.

The group reorganized by persuading original drummer Bill Ward to return and, in a move that surprised heavy metal fans, recruiting Ian Gillan (b. Aug. 19, 1945), former lead singer of Black Sabbath rivals Deep Purple. This lineup — Iommi, Butler, Ward, and Gillan — recorded Born Again, released in September 1983. Black Sabbath hit the road prior to the album's release, with drummer Bev Bevan (b. Nov 25, 1946) substituting for Ward, who would return to the band in the spring of 1984. The album was a Top Five hit in the U.K. but only made the Top 40 in the U.S. Gillan remained with Black Sabbath until March 1984, when he joined a Deep Purple reunion and was replaced by singer Dave Donato, who was in the band until October without being featured on any of its recordings.

Black Sabbath reunited with Ozzy Osbourne for its set at the Live Aid concert on July 13, 1985, but soon after the performance, bassist Geezer Butler left the band, and with that the group became guitarist Tony Iommi's vehicle, a fact emphasized by the next album, Seventh Star, released in January 1986 and credited to "Black Sabbath featuring Tony Iommi." On this release, the lineup was Iommi (guitar); another former Deep Purple singer, Glenn Hughes (b. Aug 21, 1952) (vocals); Dave Spitz (bass); Geoff Nichols (keyboards); and Eric Singer (drums). The album was a modest commercial success, but the new band began to fragment immediately, with Hughes replaced by singer Ray Gillen for the promotional tour in March 1986.

With Black Sabbath now consisting of Iommi and his employees, personnel changes were rapid. The Eternal Idol (November 1987), which failed to crack the U.K. Top 50 or the U.S. Top 100, featured a returning Bev Bevan, bassist Bob Daisley, and singer Tony Martin. Bevan and Daisley didn't stay long, and there were several replacements in the bass and drum positions over the next couple of years. Headless Cross (April 1989), the band's first album for I.R.S. Records, found veteran drummer Cozy Powell (b. Dec 29, 1947, d. Apr 5, 1998) and bassist Laurence Cottle joining Iommi and Martin. It marked a slight uptick in Black Sabbath's fortunes at home, with the title song managing a week in the singles charts. Shortly after its release, Cottle was replaced by bassist Neil Murray. With Geoff Nichols back on keyboards, this lineup made Tyr (August 1990), which charted in the Top 40 in the U.K. but became Black Sabbath's first regular album to miss the U.S. charts.

Iommi was able to reunite the 1979-1983 lineup of the band — himself, Geezer Butler, Ronnie James Dio, and Vinnie Appice — for Dehumanizer (June 1992), which brought Black Sabbath back into the American Top 50 for the first time in nine years, while in the U.K. the album spawned "TV Crimes," their first Top 40 hit in a decade. And on November 15, 1992, Iommi, Butler, and Appice backed Ozzy Osbourne as part of what was billed as the singer's final live appearance. Shortly after, it was announced that Osbourne would be rejoining Black Sabbath.

That didn't happen — yet. Instead, Dio and Appice left again, and Iommi replaced them by bringing back Tony Martin and adding drummer Bob Rondinelli. Cross Purposes (February 1994) was a modest seller, and, with Iommi apparently maintaining a Rolodex of all former members from which to pick and choose, the next album, Forbidden (June 1995), featured returning musicians Cozy Powell, Geoff Nichols, and Neil Murray, along with Iommi and Martin. The disc spent only one week in the British charts, suggesting that Black Sabbath finally had exhausted its commercial appeal, at least as a record seller. With that, the group followed the lead of the Eagles and Fleetwood Mac, putting the most popular lineup of the band back together for a live album with a couple of new studio tracks on it. Recorded in the band's hometown of Birmingham, England, in December 1997, the two-CD set Reunion — featuring all four of Black Sabbath's original members, Iommi, Osbourne, Butler, and Ward — was released in October 1998. It charted only briefly in the U.K., but in the U.S. it just missed reaching the Top Ten and went platinum. The track "Iron Man" won Black Sabbath its first Grammy Award for Best Metal Performance. The band toured through the end of 1999, concluding their reunion tour on December 22, 1999, back in Birmingham. In February 2001, Black Sabbath announced that it would reunite once again to headline the sixth edition of Ozzfest, Osbourne's summer concert festival, playing 29 cities in the U.S. beginning in June. More surprisingly, the group also announced its intention to record a studio album of all-new material, the original lineup's first since 1978. By the end of the year, a failed recording session with producer Rick Rubin proved what an unreasonable idea this was, and the band laid dormant while Osbourne enjoyed scoring a hit TV series the following spring.


Black Sabbath的吉他谱

Children Of The Grave
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Devil Cried
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Electric Funeral
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End Of The Beggining
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End Of The Beginning
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Fine
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Iron Man (Acoustic)
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Iron Man
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Junior's Eyes
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Loner
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Looking For Today
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Over To You
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Paranoid (Solo)
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Planet Caravan
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Sabbath Bloody Sabbath
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Sabbra Cadabra
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Scary Dreams
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Sleeping Village A Bit of Finger
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Snowblind (E)
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Snowblind
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